| Literature DB >> 23282548 |
Stephanie Rombold1, Markus Ollert, Martin Sbornik, Jürgen Rakoski, Ulf Darsow, Johannes Ring.
Abstract
A 21-year-old patient experienced asthmatic attacks when cleaning the cage of his budgerigar. Skin tests and radioallergosorbent test were positive to grass pollen and negative for budgerigar feathers and feces. When the food of the bird, a mixture of grain, was tested, a positive reaction to millet was found. Nasal provocation test with millet was positive. Specific immunoglobulin E antibodies against millet were detected in the radioallergosorbent test and in immunoblot analysis. The immunoblot showed specific immunoglobulin E antibodies against a 60-kd protein in millet of birdseed and against a 60- and 36-kd protein in common millet. Immediate-type allergy to millet is rare and occurs mostly as anaphylactic reaction after ingestion of millet but may also occur as asthmatic attack after inhalation of millet.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 23282548 PMCID: PMC3650989 DOI: 10.1097/WOX.0b013e31817833ef
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Figure 1Common millet (.
Figure 2The package of Budgerigar Twitter Mixture (.
Figure 3Positive reaction in the skin prick test to a diluted and undiluted solution: on the left side, the blue component of the birdseed; on the right side, common millet.
Figure 4Specific IgE antibodies against a 60-kd protein in millet of birdseed (left) and against a 60-kd protein in common millet (right) in the immunoblot analysis.